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Seen elsewhere: This week in the ‘alt’ media

AFTER a short break we are back, gathering news items that you won’t hear about in mainstream media.

Political persecution, Western style:

The persecution of Tommy Robinson continues. His ‘admin’ twitter site reports that 18 months in solitary confinement won’t be the end of it for him if the Government gets its way. Read here of their fear that he will be rearrested on release in July:

Meanwhile Hashem Abedi, a highly dangerous Islamist terrorist who was convicted of murdering 22 people at the Ariana Grande concert, was free to roam his prison and to commit his second life damaging attack on prison officers.

While we are on the subject of Tommy, don’t miss Prof. Norman Fenton’s Outspoken alert on the truth about Robinson’s ‘racism. Watch the segment for yourself.

The persecution of Dr Reiner Fuellmich also continues. He is a political prisoner, Dr Robert Malone argues.  Last week he was sentenced to nearly four years in jail following six months already spent in solitary confinement for alleged embezzlement of his Corona Investigative Committee’s funds. Last week Malone updated his September article on Fuellmich’s gross mistreatment and abuse by the German authorities. Fuellmich was one of the first individuals to recognise that the covid measures constituted crimes against humanity and set up the Corona Investigative Committee. You can read his account of Fuellmich’s treatment since his arrest a year ago, including not being allowed to see his wife since that day, here

It is shocking in the extreme. Whatever the truth is behind the embezzlement charge, as with Tommy his treatment and sentence is disproportionate and follows a determined witch hunt by the German authorities. 

An introduction to Peter Brabeck-Letmathe. Let that name chill you to the bone. He is the ‘temporary replacement’ at the World Economic Forum of Klaus Schwab, who has been ousted. A former CEO of Nestle, Brabeck-Letmathe believes no one has the right to water. This is the blogger Helena Glass’s take on it.

Is his predecessor Klaus Swab a scoundrel? Is he Dr Evil? Yes, of course, says Clayton Morris of Redacted. But did he also scam the WEF? Clayton opines on reports that the 87-year-old is under investigation by the WEF.   

Anti-immigration protests

All over Europe last weekend people were on the street protesting against the globalists’ favourite policy, open borders and mass immigration. Not that you would have known from the MSM. As Inevitable West reported, the legacy media was silent.

Here is footage from Germany:

From Belgium:

And finally from the biggest and totally peaceful mass protest in Ireland, this is footage of the 100,000 in Dublin:

St George’s Day

And something else you won’t see in the MSM except negatively: pictures of an English community covering itself in St George’s flags.

India Pakistan tensions spill over here

Nobody can have missed the tension and skirmishes on the borders of India and Pakistan following the terrorist attack in Kashmir?  Less well know is their long history. Francis Pike sets it out authoritatively in the Spectator. The greater threat than a war between India an Pakistan is that radical Sunni jihadist group, the Resistance Front, an offshoot of Lashkar-e-Taiba (LT) behind the terror attack may become a major player in global jihad, Pike says: ‘Thus far the jihadi threat has largely come from Middle Eastern instability. But the much larger Muslim diaspora from the sub-continent potentially poses a much greater long-term threat.’

Tensions between Hindu and Islamic communities have been building for some time in UK Serious events involving fighting in UK streets last week suggests that tension from India and Pakistan has spilled over into UK along with its violence. Candid Lubna, a British YouTuber, explains it in this excellent report. She is of Pakistan origin and is troubled by the extremists. She has had threats from them too. This report shows you Farage taking on one of the extremists.

All that glitters is not gold

From social revolt to economic revolt: here is Alasdair Macleod’s update on gold and the collapse of fiat currencies. Gold hit a new record of $3,500 an ounce and then fell back to $3,315. Macleod gives his well-founded view of what is happening. He believes China’s protection of its currency against the USD’s seeming downfall is the reason. You can follow his explanation here.

Andy Schectman thinks that the big banks are repatriating gold and silver before a major event happens. The banks predict gold could hit $4,500 while Schectman thinks it might be higher. Gold is now considered a Tier 1 asset. Many banks think that gold will have a revaluation. Schectman’s view of gold and silver follows.

Jim Rikards gets into mathematical predictions for the price of gold. He concludes that gold is likely to get all the way up to $15,000 an ounce sometime over the next few years. Here’s his thinking.

Global politics and peace talks

As usual Trump has been derided efforts by the derangement mob for his peace-making efforts, yet possibly one of the most important things Trump has said was his answer to ‘what concessions has Russia offered in an effort to reach peace?’ His reply was blunt: ‘Stopping the war, stopping from taking the whole of the country . . . pretty big concession.’

For once a US politician has articulated something resembling strategic awareness. He grasps the basic truth that most of the West still refuses to acknowledge: this war will end on Russia’s terms. Last week Trump also made clear that Crimea is not on the agenda. He’s reminded journalists this was Obama’s decision. Here John Leake highlights a brief account of Crimea’s bloody history.

What of the home economic front for Trump?

If you want a  gloomy picture of what is happening to the US economy, Lena Petrova delivers it. She says Trump’s policies are causing financial uncertainty and businesses are not investing. Petrova opines that a major downturn in the US economy is coming.

However, Tyler Durden of Zero Hedge’s analysis of the dire economic straits China finds itself in offers a more hopeful perspective for the US. He says: ‘The Trump Administration’s tariffs on China are not the initiator of the nation’s troubles, they are more a bookend to a process of decline that has been ongoing for years.’ What Trump’s critics don’t understand, he says, is that uncertainty is the real leverage, not the tariffs: ‘What seems like a spur-of-the-moment decision or a sudden capitulation on Trump’s part can be highly effective at throwing foreign governments and corporations off-balance. Globalism requires a perpetual status quo; change of any kind is like holy water to a vampire.’  

Read the whole article here.

And finally

Trump’s ‘U-turn’ against covid and lockdown lies. The news is two weeks old but still important to mention. The Trump admin has replaced its covid website with a page listing establishment lies on lockdowns, fastening blame on Anthony Fauci and the lab leak. Lifesite News reports here.

Critics however believe the president still has some way to go in facing the truth behind the ‘plandemic’, the actual existence of Covid-19 lab leak or not.  He doesn’t seem to have got to (publicly anyway) the ‘war on microbes’ that the US bio-defence mafia had been so assiduously pushing in order to get otherwise uneconomic mRNA  platforms financed – all uncovered by Paula Jardine on TCW.



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